At the insistence of Bnei Yisrael, and with Hashem's
permission, Moshe sends 12 scouts, one from each tribe, to investigate
Canaan. Anticipating trouble, Moshe changes Hoshea's name to
Yehoshua, expressing a prayer that Hashem not let him fail in
his mission. They return 40 days later, carrying unusually large
fruit. When 10 of the 12 state that the people in Canaan are
as formidable as the fruit, the men are discouraged. Calev and
Yehoshua, the only two scouts still in favor of the invasion,
try to bolster the people's spirit. The nation, however, decides
that the Land is not worth the potentially fatal risks, and instead
demands a return to Egypt! Moshe's fervent prayers save the nation
from Heavenly annihilation, however, Hashem declares that they
must remain in the desert for 40 years until the men who wept
at the scouts' false report pass away. A remorseful group rashly
begins an invasion of the Land based on Hashem's original command.
Moshe warns them not to proceed, but they ignore this and are
massacred by the Amalekites and Canaanites. Hashem instructs
Moshe concerning the offerings to be made when Bnei Yisrael will
finally enter the Land. The people are commanded to remove challah,
a donation for the kohanim, from their dough. The laws for an
offering after an inadvertent sin, for an individual or a group,
are explained. However, should someone blaspheme against Hashem
and be unrepentant, he will be cut off spiritually from his people.
One man is found gathering wood on public property in violation
of the laws of Shabbos, and is executed. The laws of tzitzit
are taught. We recite the section about the tzitzit twice a day
because it reminds us of the Exodus.

"And they cut from there a vine with one
cluster of grapes, and bore it on a double pole, and of the pomegranates
and of the figs..." (13:23)

It always struck me as somewhat bizarre that the
Israeli Tourist Board should have chosen as its symbol the spies
carrying a massive cluster of grapes. The spies entire agenda
was to denigrate the land of Israel. One would think that a Tourist
Board whose raison d'etre is to do totally the opposite, would
find the image rather disturbing.

Thankfully, we have more ways of repairing the damage
of the spies' evil words than mere marketing. The mitzvah of
bikkurim - the bringing of the first fruits to Jerusalem
- was given to us as an atonement for the spies. The spies showed
revulsion for the Land, and in the era of the Holy Temple, the
mitzvah of bikkurim gave us the opportunity to show our
love of the Land. Thus, the mitzvah of the bikkurim was
applicable only to the seven species for which the Land is praised:
Wheat, barley, grapes, dates, figs, olives and pomegranates.

The Mishna explains the mitzvah of bikkurim:
"A person going down to his field and seeing the first fig,
the first grapes or the first pomegranate, ties a reed around
the fruit and says 'These are bikkurim.' "

It's interesting that out of the seven species for
which the Land is praised, only three are mentioned in the Mishna.
It's not by coincidence. For it was just those three species
that the spies brought back with them from the Land: Grapes,
pomegranates and figs.

Those very fruits that the spies used for their
smear campaign against the Land became the subject of a mitzvah
whose whole purpose was to show the dearness of the Land.

THE WORD

"Because he has disgraced the Word of
G-d" (15:31)

I'm not much of a gardener. My thumbs always seem
greener than my lawn. However, an expert gardener can take any
part of a tree, even the smallest leaf, and from that leaf re-grow
the entire tree. Not only from little acorns do mighty oaks grow.
You can grow an oak from any of its parts.

The Book of Proverbs calls the Torah a tree: "It
is a tree of life to those who hold onto it." The Book
of Proverbs isn't mere poetry. If the Torah is called a tree,
it means something about a tree expresses the essence of the Torah.

The Torah's subject matter is vast, but contained
in every word of the Torah is the whole Torah. If a person plants
a word of Torah in his heart, be it from any of its myriad subjects,
he can grow the tree of the entire Torah.

Separate entities grafted together result not in
a true whole, but rather a collection of parts. True unity exists
when every part can independently express the whole, when every
part contains the potential to be the whole.

Drawing its source from this week's parsha, the
Talmud (Sanhedrin 99a) lists several definitions of what
can be termed "because he has disgraced the Word of G-d."
One of these is someone who says that the whole of the Torah
is of Divine origin except for one sentence. Denying one word
of Torah is equivalent to boring a small hole in an ocean liner.
Eventually the whole ship will sink.

Maybe, however, we can understand his failing on
a much more fundamental level.

The verse doesn't say that he has disgraced the
"words" of G-d. It says "the word"in
the singular. Why?

When a person denies a single word of Torah, he
attacks its indivisible unity. Thus, it is the "Word"
he has disgraced, and not just the words.

ONE WORD THAT CONTAINS ALL

The world was created with ten statements. "Let
there be light...Let the earth sprout vegetation...Let us make
man..."

Count them, however, and you'll only find nine.
Where is the tenth statement? The answer is that the first word
of the Torah, "Bereishet -In the beginning,"
was also a statement.

This first utterance, however, was unique. It doesn't
say "And G-d said 'In the beginning...'" It
just says "In the beginning..." Because in Bereishet,
in that first word, everything was created together at once.
Everything that would eventually be the words of G-d was
brought into existence with just one word.

TEN COMMANDMENTS THAT ARE ONE WORD

Similarly, the Ten Commandments were first spoken
"as one word." One Word that no mouth could speak,
that no ear could hear. Only after that first utterance did G-d
explain the ten separately.

What is this Word that no mouth can speak nor no
ear hear? It is that Word which is beyond human comprehension,
forever beyond our grasp.

When G-d first spoke the Ten Commandments, the Jewish
People perceived them as one sound. One sound that was impossible
to grasp. They heard but did not understand. They couldn't distinguish
one word from another.

Our understanding operates only through the perception
of each part, each voice by itself. The human ear cannot hear
an individual sound as a separate entity when it is mixed with
another sound. We perceive by identifying separate entities,
distinguishing one thing from another.

However, there is another kind of perception, one
that doesn't deal with what things are, rather that they are.
This is the perception of existence itself. That
there is an existence. This perception, the mouth cannot speak
nor the ear hear. The perception of existence defies categorization.
It is the perception of is.

THE KNOWLEDGE OF IS

This perception is called the One Word that contains
all words. All other perception is in the realm of explanation
and distinction. But the perception of existence itself cannot
be understood by means of explanation.

The Hebrew word for explanation is perush,
from the root "to separate." From where is it separated?
From the First Word. An explanation separates a thing from the
original Word which contained everything - Bereishet.
The grasp of existence itself, however, transcends explanation.
It is the perception of is.

Existence is synonymous with the Word of G-d, the
Word with which the Heavens and the Earth were created. That
Word, the mouth cannot speak nor the ear hear.

All the Torah is one. When a person seeks to make
its ineffable unity into mere words, he disgraces and cheapens
it. He has brought down the Word to the merely human level
of explanation: he imposes "perush" separation
upon the transcendent Unity of our Holy Torah.

Joshua 2:1 - 2:24

This Haftara narrates the story of the two spies
sent by Joshua to explore the city of Jericho in preparation for
the first conquest of the Promised Land. Our Sages teach that
the two spies were Calev and Pinchas, two very righteous people,
for Joshua wanted to be sure to avoid an outcome similar to that
of the twelve spies sent by Moses, recorded in this week's Parsha.
The spies entered the city as earthenware dealers and sought lodgings
by Rachav. After they were detected by the locals, their hostess
proved a great ally by hiding them. She then told them that the
psychological warfare had been won already, as the inhabitants
were petrified from the mere idea of waging war with the Israelites,
after hearing about the miracles performed for them. After sending
them off safely they in turn promised her to save her and her
family.

EARTHENWARE

The passage begins with the fact that they were sent
in secrecy; the term used is "cheresh." Since
this term reminds us of the word "cheres" - Hebrew
for earthenware - our Sages deduct that they took along pottery
to disguise themselves as traveling earthenware merchants. The
Chidushei HaRim explains that Joshua had reason to choose clay
vessels as the ware for the disguise, in order to remind them
not to stumble as had the previous spies. Earthenware vessels
differ from other vessels in that they do not accept spiritual
defilement unless their interior comes into contact with
the spiritually defiled. This is because, unlike metal, wood
or glass, the clay from which they are formed has no importance;
its sole significance is due to its form as a vessel. Spiritual
impurity passes only when it contacts the important aspect of
an entity, so regarding clay vessels, unless it touches the interior,
which symbolizes the usefulness, the impurity will not pass on.
Joshua wished the spies to understand that a man is like an earthenware
vessel: His significance lies in his duty, he has no self importance.
This thought would prevent them from diverting from their assignment.

Selections from classical Torah sources
which express the special relationship between
the People of Israel and Eretz Yisrael

JERICHO

The first city to be conquered by Joshua and the
Israelites, Jericho relied on its impenetrable fortifications
to withstand any attack. After receiving his spies' report that
the fear of Israel gripped the city's inhabitants, Joshua led
his army in a march around Jericho's massive walls for seven days.
On the seventh day the walls miraculously gave way, allowing
the Israelites to conquer the city.

The walls did not actually "come tumbling down"
as the old spiritual has it. Since they were as thick as they
were high, such a tumble would have been meaningless. They sank
into the ground, with only a small portion remaining above the
ground to mark the miracle.

Modern Jericho is populated by Arabs, but there
is an ancient synagogue which Jews have made repeated efforts
to preserve as a Jewish holy place.